Category: Industry

  • How to avoid gas tanks explosions, by SON DG

    How to avoid gas tanks explosions, by SON DG

    Frequent explosions of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) storage tanks and cylinders across the country are avoidable, Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) Director-General Mr. Osita Aboloma has said.

    To avoid such incidents, Aboloma urged operators in the sector to subscribe to the SON certification of their vessels.

    He said due certification of LPG storage vessels, proper maintenance and handling of cylinders, safe and ethical practices are necessary steps to avoid explosions and gas accidents.

    According to him, the agency will invoke the provisions of the SON Act No. 14 of 2015 on any operator found to have circumvented the mandatory requirement of certifying its LPG storage vessels, thereby putting the lives of Nigerians at risk of injury and or death.

    He said necessary investigation was being carried out on the recent explosion in Owerri, Imo State with a view to nipping future occurrences in the bud.

    Abaloma gave these safety tips while speaking to reporters in Abuja at the training of 30 SON engineers in the operations of three recently acquired mobile testing equipment for the inspection, testing and certification of LPG storage tanks, pressure vessels and pipelines.

    He challenged the SON officials to ensure that only certified LPG vessels and storage tanks are in operation across the country within the shortest possible time.

    The engineers were trained on the theory and practical of operating the mobile testing equipment to enable them acquire skills necessary to effectively use them across the country.

    This, according to the DG, was in line with SON’s policy to develop required human and material capacity to enable the organisation carry out its statutory mandate, which in this case, applies to the LPG sector.

    He said the LPG storage vessels certification by authorised and competent bodies is an international practice and a mandatory requirement to assure the integrity, effectiveness and suitability of the vessels to store liquefied petroleum gas without failure.

    Aboloma said LPG vessels are certified to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Code, Division 1, Section VIII: 2015 by SON.

    The certification, he stated, is one of the requirements of the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) for issuing licences to LPG plant operators. He said brand new vessels are certified for five years after which revalidation is carried out every three years.

    Aboloma said another set of 32 engineers were trained in Lagos to ensure that the mobile testing equipment in Lagos (for the Southwest Zone), Enugu (for the Southeast and Southsouth Zones) and Abuja for the Northern Zone can be put to effective use across the country.

    The SON chief said a joint committee of stakeholders in the LPG sector was inaugurated by SON to, among others, work out modalities for a scheme to re-qualify LPG cylinders.

    The scheme, according the SON chief executive, will involve the withdrawal of substandard cylinders from circulation and ensure the production, import, sale and use of only duly certified LPG cylinders.

  • ‘Lagos owes its prosperity to robust planning, procurement’

    ‘Lagos owes its prosperity to robust planning, procurement’

    Robust planning, procurement and budgeting techniques employed by  the Lagos State government made it a model and one of the strong economies in Africa.

    Its Ministry of Economic Planning & Budget Permanent Secretary, Mr. Kadiri Aboyomi Adebisi, who stated this in Lagos, said the state was  harmonising its planning and budgeting with stakeholders in view of her long-term strategic plan for 2025.

    He spoke at a sensitisation and advocacy workshop on planning reforms and procurement for the chairmen and legislative leaders in Lagos.

    He said the idea was to introduce officials of local governments to budget and planning, which are key to the state’s prosperity

    Adebisi added that the state government was harmonising the template to get every level of governance to have the same vision and plan.

    Earlier, Local Governments Auditor-General Mr. Olatunji Jimoh advised the local government chairmen on the need to translate their promises into concrete action. He urged them on the need for systematic allocation of resources on performance targets.

    Jimoh, who was represented by the Director, Planning, Research & Development Directorate, Rev. Mcewen Lamai, reiterated that no meaningful development could be achieved without proper planning and budgeting.

    Stressing the importance of budgeting, he said: “The approved budget is the expenditure authority derived from law, appropriation bill for an entity to apply specified funds from its revenue for identified purposes. The budget established authority for expenditure on specified items and the legal limit within which an entity must operate.”

  • Events centres owners decry multiple taxes

    Events centres owners decry multiple taxes

    Owners of events centres, under the auspices of the Association of Venue Owners Lagos Nigeria (AVOLN), have urged the government at all levels to reduce the multiple taxes in the sector, saying they are crippling their businesses.

    At the launch of their logo in Lagos,  their President, Wemi Jones, said they pay as much as 15 taxes to the federal, state and local governments, urging that the taxes be cut drastically.

    He said the government should see the group with over 100 registered members out of 1000 practitioners as partners in nation building.

    He said his colleagues were discussing with the government on the issue.

    Lagos State Director for Internal Revenue Service (LIRS) Mrs Arinola Koladaisi noted that tax payment was critical for national development. She promised to look into the issue of multiple taxation, asking their support. She accused some AVOLN members of not remitting a particular tax which they had collected from their customers, warning that those involved should stop or be ready to face the law when caught.

    A representative of the state commissioner for Tourism, art and Culture Mrs Babara Wey, advised AVOLN members to partner the ministry, remain focused in their business and be educated to be on top of their game.

    At the event, a logo of the association was unveiled amid fun and fanfare. Jones urged members to keep to the industry’s standards.

    Lagos State Safety Commission Director-General Akin Dickson also advised AVOLN members to be safety conscious. He said constructing slippery floors as well as not having fire extinguishers, among others, could attract punishment.

  • Maximisng dairy farmers’potential

    Maximisng dairy farmers’potential

    Nigeria’s demand for milk is estimated at 1.1 billion litres yearly. Her milk production capacity stands at 400 million litres yearly, leaving a supply gap of 700 million litres. But, a Dairy Development Programme to bridge the gap and empower local dairy farmers has begun. It is being promoted by FrieslandCampina WAMCO Plc to develop the dairy value chain. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports that the initiative is a shot in the arm of the government’s backward integration policy aimed at building capacity in manufacturing to reduce imports, create jobs and drive industrialisation.

    These are exciting times for dairy farmers. Courtesy of the Farmer2Farmer Pro-gramme of FrieslandCampina WAMCO Plc, makers of Peak and Three Crowns milk, their fortunes have improved.

    For instance, from a maximum of two litres per cow daily, farmers’ milk production  has increased to between 10 and 12 litres per cow daily, resulting in a boost to their income.

    The Farmer2Farmer Programme is an important component of FrieslandCampina WAMCO’s Dairy Development Programme. It is a unique engagement where certified dairy farmers from The Netherlands train and advise their Nigerian counterparts on best dairy farming methods.

    Under the initiative, launched last month at the company’s host communities in Oyo State, the Dutch farmers engaged local pastoralists on dairy farming practices, such as  animal health and welfare, farm record keeping, feeding and watering, calf-rearing, milking hygiene, cow fertility, hoof care, housing and barn design.

    The goal of the programme, according to FrieslandCampina WAMCO Corporate Affairs Director Ore Famurewa is “to improve milk quality and increase milk production on dairy farms”.

    She said the programme was contributing to higher incomes for farmers and better living standards for their families as well as safeguarding local food security in the markets.

    One of the dairy farmers and   owner of Genius Integrated Farms, Iseyin, Oyo State, Mr. Moyosore Olatunde Rafiu, confirmed that farmers’ yield has improved tremendously on the strength of the programme. He said the programme ensured the transfer of technical skills to them by Dutch dairy farmers, particularly in cross breeding of Fulani cows.

    Other best global dairy farming practices that helped boost capacity, he said, included artificial insemination, animal health and nutrition, vaccines, forage production and state-of-the-art veterinary equipment.

    The programme is a private-public-partnership (PPP) initiative aimed at developing the dairy industry by creating a sustainable raw milk value chain that contributes to food security through provision of quality dairy nutrition to Nigerians as well as providing jobs.

    Famurewa said the idea was to make the dairy sector more attractive for youths.

    The Farmer2Farmer initiative was integrated with the Dairy Farmers’ Day, created and hosted by FrieslandCampina WAMCO. The first edition held in Iseyin last week. It was aimed at highlighting the importance of dairy farming in the provision of food and employment for rural farmers.

    The event celebrated dairy farmers from the five local government areas where FrieslandCampina WAMCO’s dairy development programme is  being implemented in Oyo State.

    Friesland-Campina WAMCO Managing Director Mr. Ben Langat said: “As a company, we will continue to lead in steering economic solutions in the dairy sector and to play a key role in the ongoing efforts to improve and maximise the potential of dairy farming in Nigeria.”

    He said the event was to celebrate all the dairy farmers across the communities in Oyo where the DPP is being implemented, adding that it also facilitates knowledge exchange and experiential learning between local dairy farmers and dairy experts from within and outside Nigeria.

    Langat noted that the dairy sector faced a number of challenges particularly the nomadic nature of the pastoralists who are mainly the cattle owners, coupled with lack of good quality grazing reserves and pastures, which result in poor nutrition for lactating cows and poor productivity of indigenous cattle breeds.

    He also identified the unorthodox fresh milk collection, processing and marketing channels; lack of infrastructure (access roads, potable water, electricity, and modern dairy farming technologies) and absence of enabling policies regarding dairy farming as other factors that contribute to the current undesirable state of the dairy sector.

    Langat, however, said despite the challenges, private firms and individuals, in some cases, in collaboration with state and federal governments, are making efforts to ensure improvement in the dairy sector. Some of the interventions, according to him, are focused on strengthening of milk marketing, collection and payment by private firms.

    Others, he said, are focused on improving extension and productivity services, animal health and cross breeding schemes, aggregation of farmers for easier access to credit facilities and markets as well as facilitation of inputs and infrastructure in dairy zones, among others.

    Encouraged by such efforts and interventions, Langat believes that the future of dairy farming is promising. “We would like to look to the future and envision what dairy farming should look like in about a decade (2030 to be precise).

    “We expect a total turn around and 100 per cent improvement of the policy and enabling environment; research and development; economic empowerment; infrastructure; nutrition and food security; operations and farming practices,” he said.

    Langat projected that by 2030, there will be access to finance and credit facilities, access to land for grazing, pasture, feed et al; improved reviewed policies, clear regulations on land ownership in different parts of the country; improved research in animal health and nutrition as well as technologies for enhancing dairy farming.

    He also said there will be more smallholder farmers with well-established ranches; improved availability of modern farming methods and equipment; availability of variety of dairy products, markets for the milk products from farmers organised dairy clusters and cooperatives, well established dairy communities with well developed facilities- schools, hospitals; access roads across dairy zones, potable water, regular electricity; improved yield of milk in litres  per cow per day, and 100 per cent local sourcing of milk.

    The output of milk per cow daily in Nigeria is low, compared to other African countries, such as Kenya and Uganda, with between 30 and 40 litres of milk per cow daily. This, according to experts, is because Nigeria’s dairy sector is still largely characterised by cattle ownership belonging to Fulani pastoralists who are nomadic.

    The pastoralists go for days on long distances to graze their cattle and look for pasture and water for them. This affects the quality and quantity of their milk.

    Available statistics put the yearly demand of milk in Nigeria at 1.1 billion litres. The estimated yearly production is 400 million litres, leaving annual demand/supply gap of 700 million litres. This is clearly an opportunity for FrieslandCampina WAMCO and, indeed, other dairy companies as well as Nigerian dairy farmers to benefit as they bridge this sizeable gap.

    For now, FrieslandCampina WAMCO is the only dairy manufacturer sourcing part of its raw milk locally through the programme. Interestingly, the scheme bodes well with the Federal Government’s backward integration policy that encourages building capacity in local manufacturing to significantly reduce imports and create jobs.

    Under the programme’s sustainable raw milk value chain, Fulani herdsmen constitute the first leg of the empowerment scheme under which they are trained to ensure they get the best quality milk. The herdsmen are supported through consistent trainings and demonstrations to upgrade their milk supply in terms of quantity and, more importantly, quality.

    They are also trained in the use of crop residues and fortification as sources of good feed to cattle. Also, feed preservation through silage and hay making are demonstrated, while crossbreeding through artificial insemination was carried out.

    One of the Dutch famers, Mr. Gerben Smeenk, confirmed that the farmers, during the training, demonstrated high level of enthusiasm in learning new, improved farming methods

    The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, lauded the company’s efforts in creating and hosting the first Dairy Farmers’ Day.

    Noting that the initiative has taken a firm root in the state and is spreading to other parts of the country, Ogbeh reiterated the Federal Government’s commitment to the success of the programme .

    From the Ambassador of The Netherlands to Nigeria, Mr. Robert Petri,  also came assurances that the country would strengthen its partnership with the government in agriculture.

    “Agric is a priority for the government and dairy farming is part of it,” he said.

    Since its inception in 2011, the programme has spanned across five LGAs of Iseyin, Ibarapa, Saki West, Atiba and Itesiwaju in the state in collaboration with Federal Ministry of Agriculture and the government.

    Specifically, the focus of implementation has been on identification of dairy value chain actors in the state; sensitisation, registration and organisation of potential dairy farmers; training of farmers and extension workers; milk collection, testing and quality control; crossbreeding; tsetse eradication programmes; improved and hybrid pasture cultivation demonstrations for farmers.

    According to the Dairy Development Project Manager, Mr. John Olayiwola, over 1,800 farmers, including men and women, are engaged in the programme. He said through the programme, FrieslandCampina WAMCO introduced the local farmers to the use of banks and other modern payment channels.

    The Nation also learnt that the introduction of the Dutch Grass-to-Glass approach, which encourages inside grazing, may have also assisted government in addressing the grazing challenge. The company has been able to reduce the menace of Fulani herdsmen, at least, in the state.

  • Osinbajo inaugurates 5,000 tonnes cashew processing plant

    Osinbajo inaugurates 5,000 tonnes cashew processing plant

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has inaugurated a 5,000 tonnes per year capacity cashew processing factory in Ilorin, Kwara State capital.

    He was accompanied by the governor of the state, Abdulfatah Ahmed; Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed; CEO/Executive Director, Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC), Olusegun Awolowo and Executive Director, Bank of Industry (BoI), Waheed Olagunju.

    Prof Osinbajo, after a guided tour of the plant owned by FoodPro Limited, said he was impressed by the factory and its commitment to adhere  to global standards. He expressed the administration’s resolve to support the private sector with policies that would aid local businesses.

    FoodPro co-founder/CEO, Ayo Olajiga, took Osinbajo on a guided tour of the factory, the different stages of cashew processing from sizing and boiling, shelling and scooping, to drying and peeling and finally, grading and packaging.

    According to Olajiga, the importance of cashew processing to economic development cannot be over-emphasised, as it creates sustainable jobs (both direct and indirect) and leads to overall increase in the value of the cashew sector.

    She said: “Through domestic processing of raw cashew nuts, we have created more than 400 direct jobs and several thousands indirect jobs for farmers, vendors, suppliers and artisans, who form the heartbeat of FoodPro’s value chain.

    “With 90 per cent of FoodPro’s employees being women, we are humbled by the role we play in impacting communities and improving economic and social development conditions in our host community.”

    Olajiga expressed gratitude to the Federal Government, acting through its agencies such as NEPC and BoI, both housed under the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment (FMITI).

    Over the years, the NEPC under the leadership of Awolowo has worked to help FoodPro gain valuable market access via local and international trade shows in Vietnam, the United Arab Emirates and the United States (US).

    Olajiga added that NEPC from time to time has provided the company with export-related training, while BoI provided the funding used to acquire machinery and continue to support efforts to effectively operate the factory

    FoodPro Limited has been in operation since 2013. The company recently ramped up its capacity from 1,000 to 5,000 tonnes of raw cashew nuts per annum, making it the largest locally owned cashew processing company in Nigeria.

    In addition, FoodPro’s factory is the only factory certified by the African Cashew Alliance for Food Safety and Quality.

    Also, the company has unveiled its latest addition to the FoodPro product range, GoNutz, its range of flavoured cashews.

    In the near future, the company plans to double its operating capacity further to 10,000 tonnes, commence export of packaged and branded goods, including existing brands, Lion Cashew and Go Nutz as well as a range of additional products that are currently in the development phase.

  • StarTimes offers 50% discount on subscription

    StarTimes has announced   the commencement of its 2017 Christmas promotion, in a bid to entice new and existing subscribers across the country beginning today to January 31, 2018.

    Speaking on this development, the company said it’s Christmas promotion was starting earlier this year, to give its esteemed subscribers the chance to enjoy their favourite channels for an extended period and also allow new subscribers get the best from its service offerings.

    Its Brand and Marketing Director, Mr. Qasim Elegbede, said: “Subscribers who renew their subscription for at least one month automatically gets 50 per cent discount on their second month subscription. We are entering into the festive season with lots of promotions in store for our subscribers. I believe this will allow our subscribers watch all of their favourite programmes already lined up for the Christmas and New Year season without any form of interruption.”

    StarTimes has in the last one month upgraded its channel list on the digital terrestrial platform, allowing customers who use the antenna watch as much as 80 exciting channels cutting across movies, news, sports, series, kiddies, animal documentary, religious channels and lots more.

    “As at today, there are more than 80 fantastic channels where we show Bollywood movies, series and Telenovelas 24hours a day. It gets better; we will be broadcasting the FIFA 2017 Club World Cup live and exclusively on StarTimes. Subscribers should watch out for more offers to come during this period,” he concluded.

  • Growing non-export sector with quality products

    Growing non-export sector with quality products

    The United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO), under its National Quality Infrastructure Project (NQIP), funded by the European Union (EU), has moved to entrench quality culture in Nigeria. The Organisation is riding on the crest of its National Quality Award initiative to enhance the saleability and competitiveness of Nigeria’s products and services in the world market. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports that this strategy could be the tonic to revitalise the non-oil export sector upon which the government has anchored its economic diversification agenda.

    The intervention of Nigeria’s development partners in the area of enhancing the competitiveness of the country’s products and services in the global market is coming at an auspicious time.

    This is because it is coming at a time the Federal Government, operators and stakeholders in the export business are desirous of a greater participation in global trade to drive on-going economic diversification agenda.

    Through the National Quality Infrastructure Project (NQIP), which is a European Union (EU)-funded project, but implemented by the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO), the development partners have stepped up efforts at helping Nigeria improve the quality of its products so that they can be sold internally and in the international market.

    The NQIP was established to support the development of the missing standards and accredited testing and certification bodies in Nigeria in order to improve the quality of products and services exchanged in the Nigerian, regional and international market.

    The initiative, which enjoys the support of the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, was aimed at boosting the competitiveness of locally made products at the international market place and ensure their global acceptance from Nigeria.

    However, while the NQIP was still in place, UNIDO, last week, upped the ante by organising the first National Quality Award (NQA) to boost the quality of Nigeria’s products and services. The award ceremony held at Sheraton Hotel, Lagos, was aimed at creating the desired awareness on quality and standards and also build confidence on Nigeria’s goods and services.

    At a pre-NQA media conference in Lagos, the Chief Technical Advisor, NQIP, UNIDO, Dr. Shaukat Malik, said the purpose of the award was to drive the sustainability of quality culture in Nigeria.  He said UNIDO remained committed to entrenching quality culture and ensuring that Nigeria adheres to international best practices related to quality.

    According to Shaukat, quality awards have proved powerful tool for boosting the economies of developed countries of the world where the awards have been in place and Nigeria will not be an exception. He said, for instance, that Japan came up with the quality award in 1951, after World War 11.

    Similarly, the United States of America and the EU started their quality awards in 1988 to improve the quality of their companies and boost their economies.

    “More than 40 countries in the world are running quality awards every year. It’s popular in the Middle East, China, South Africa and others because they are getting the benefits from increased productivity and competitiveness, Shaukat added.

    The UNIDO Chief Technical Advisor explained that there are four levels in this year’s quality awards and that in each level there are three organisational categories.

    While Category A is for larger organisations with 100 employees, Category B is for medium organisation with more than 20 to 100 employees. Category C is for small organisations with one to 20 employees.

    The Quality Infrastructure & International Trade Expert for UNIDO, Mr. Simeon Umukoro, said the quality award is criteria-based. Any business operating in Nigeria is eligible to apply for an award in one of the three categories, depending on its size.

    According to Umukoro, winners, who are local businesses and entrepreneurs, will be determined based on a set of criteria derived from the standards issued by the International Organisation for Standardization for quality management system requirements (ISO 9001:2015) and for performance improvement (ISO 9004).

    The NQA of Nigeria also corresponds to the rules and standards of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) on quality awards. The award was created in line with the ECOWAS region approved criteria for national quality awards, adopted at the 781st Ordinary Session of the ECOWAS Council of Ministers in Abidjan in December 2013.

    Umukoro said the quality awards will increase the awareness of Nigerian companies and entrepreneurs on quality and standards. He said it will also boost consumer confidence in Nigerian products and services while also promoting healthy competition among manufacturers and service providers.

    “What we consume will become safer; services will improve and patronage will be high,” the Head, Quality Control, Nigeria Commodity Exchange (NCX), Dr. Khadijat Addulaziz, said. She expressed optimism that the national quality award will address the national embarrassment caused by the rejection of agric exports from Nigeria by the importing countries.

    Dr. Abdulaziz is right. The United States (US) recently rejected 72 tonnes of yam exported by Nigeria due to poor quality. It was the latest in the series of rejection of export-bound agric products from Nigeria by US and European Union (EU).

    Before then, five containers of beans exported from Nigeria to the Republic of Ireland were rejected and returned by the importers. The products were reportedly filled with weevil.

    The season of rejection of Nigeria’s export-bound agric products is being blamed on dearth of infrastructure and Nigeria’s export regulatory agencies’ failure to adopt a quality management system approach to improve the quality of agric produce exports.

    According to operators and experts, this is bad news and a major setback for an economy severely battered by recession, requiring urgent stimulation of the non-oil export sector to give impetus to the economic diversification agenda.

    Recall that in the heat of the crisis over the rejection of beans exported from Nigeria, for instance, the Minister of State for Agriculture, Mr. Heineken Lopobiri, had describe it as “a national embarrassment”. He said the five containers of beans were returned to Nigeria because weevils were detected in them by the Republic of Island Quarantine Service.

    He said the containers were exported without the knowledge of the Nigerian Agriculture and Quarantine Service, hinted that government would return the Quarantine Service back to the ports to partake in the examination of import and export containers.

    He also said henceforth, for any agro-product to leave the country, it has to be certified by the Quarantine Service, as this is the global practice in the United States and other developed countries.

    However, Lopobiri’s promises that government will put its house in order to avoid a repeat was still in place when the US authorities turned back 72 tonnes of yam exported by Nigeria to that country over issues around poor quality and packaging.

    Even if Lopobiri had made good his promise return the Quarantine Service to the the ports, it still does not resolve the more fundamental issue of lack of laboratories for testing and certifying made-in-Nigeria products before export.

    The lack of quality infrastructure especially laboratories to aid certification of locally produced goods for export market has continued to erode the competitiveness of locally made products in the international market.

    A national quality infrastructure, according to experts, is a system of institutions, which jointly ensure that products and services produced in the country meet predefined specifications. It also provides technical support to companies so they can improve their production processes and ensure compliance with regulations or international requirements.

    The lack of it is widely believed to be partly responsible for Nigeria’s rising unemployment. It is also the reason why Nigeria is not globally competitive. Her products and services lack global quality certification and are denied access to markets in developed economies.

    Yet, agriculture and export are two key segments of the non-oil economy, which government is now focusing on in the hope of diversifying the economy. The sector believed to be more inclusive and growth-oriented. It is also more sustainable and characterized by high economic linkages.

    However, the Director General, National Productivity Centre (NPC), Dr. Kashim Akor, blamed the sector’s under-performance on poor packaging. Speaking at the pre-NQA media conference in Lagos, Akor whose Centre is a parastatal under the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, noted that Nigeria is a country with rich, diverse agric and other non-oil export products, “but our problem is packaging.”

    “So the quality award will address the issue of poor packaging and ensure salability of Nigeria’s export products. It will ensure that whatever is produced is accepted globally,” the NPC DG said, adding, “We want to promote quality consciousness and to do this, there must be constant sensitisation.”

    Akor, who noted that quality is a marathon race that has no finishing point, stated that the NPC and Nigeria’s development partners particularly UNIDO remained committed to driving the quality culture in the private and public sectors in Nigeria. He said the award process is very thorough, meticulous and the jury is as transparent as possible.

    It was learnt that UNIDO’s inauguration of the NQA to stimulate healthy competition that will drive quality consciousness was an addition to its long history of support and intervention in Nigeria. For instance, the Organisation, few years back, made available 12 million euros for the establishment of National Accreditation System in Nigeria.

    In doing so, UNIDO, through its Country and West Africa Director, Dr. Patrick Kormawa, was emphatic that “You cannot improve on your Gross Domestic Product (GDP)) if you do not produce products in Nigeria and sell them in the international market.

    “We also will not provide the needed jobs in this country if we are not able to manufacture products here and trade them in the international or regional market.”

    “But for us to be able to trade, we need to at least, meet basic quality requirements; most of the products that are made in this country are rejected because they do not meet certain basic quality requirements.”

    Kormawa expressed hope that the 12 million euros commitment by UNIDO  will help Nigeria produce a legislation that will contain a National Quality Policy (NQP), establish an internationally recognised National Accreditation Body that will vet the activities of regulatory agencies such as Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) and the National Agency for Food, Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC).

    He said it will also help develop a National Metrology Institute to ensure that instruments are of international standards, improve the capacity of the Organised Private Sector (OPS) to conform to standards as well as establish conformity assessment bodies.

    It will also enhance the powers of the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) and other consumer organisations to sensitise consumers on quality standards as well as ensure improved consumer protection.

  • Expert canvasses wealth creation in beauty industry

    An expert in the beauty industry, Mr. Abdelrahman Kurdieh, has canvassed the need to ride on the crest of Nigeria’s burgeoning beauty industry to create wealth.

    He said the industry has numerous economic advantages if adequately explored and promoted.

    Kurdieh, who is the Regional Brand Development Manager, Messe Frankfurt Middle East, spoke at a road show in Lagos, organised to raise awareness on the 23rd Beautyworld Fair billed to hold in Dubai next May.

    Expressing optimism over the industry’s bright outlook in Nigeria and the Middle East, he noted that the upcoming edition of the leading international trade fair for beauty products will effectively boost the sector’s contribution to Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    Kurdieh said the region’s beauty & personal care sales are expected to reach $34.5 billion by 2021, up from $30 billion in 2016. He said the Middle East and Africa (MEA) region will be the driving force behind the future growth of the industry globally.

    According to him, the fair will hold from May 8 to 10 at Dubai International Convention Centre and Exhibition. The exhibition, he said, would showcase six basic product groups namely, hair, and nails and salon supplies.

    Others are cosmetics and skincare, machinery, packaging and raw materials, personal care and hygiene, fragrance compounds and finished fragrance as well as natural & organic.

    Kurdieh added that the company has also introduced a business matchmaking programme to facilitate business connections between exhibitors and visitors.

    Speaking at the sensitisation session, Registration and Regulatory Affairs Director, National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Dr. Monica Eimunjeze, urged Nigerians to take advantage of the fair to speed up the growing sector. She said the platform was critical to expanding the sector’s frontiers.

  • Aboloma, Lalung others bag ICMC fellowship

    Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) Director-General, Mr. OsitaAboloma, was among dignitaries conferred with the honorary fellowship of the Institute of Chartered Mediators and Conciliators (ICMC) during the week in Abuja.

    The conferment held during the annual conference and induction ceremony of the Institute at the National Judicial Institute, Abuja, with the theme: “Myth and Reality of Agitations; The Place of Consensus Building”.

    The ICMC is a professional body of practitioners in Nigeria, which regulates and sets standards for the practice of mediation and conciliation. It promotes the use of mediation as an alternative dispute resolution (ADR) mechanism in the effective administration of justice.

    The Institute, through the ADR, also ensures integration of continuous dialogue and popular participation in policies of governance, promotion of peace and harmonious co-existence at home, work place and the society at large.

    Giving a goodwill message before his induction, SON’s DG stated that the Organisation has fully embraced ADR in its service delivery as business facilitators, using the instrument of standardisation and quality assurance.

    According to him, the SON has trained about 40 of its members of staff from various departments on ADR and plans to train many more.

    According to Aboloma, the ADR provides greater choices for settlement of disputes and misunderstandings in the workplace, businesses and private interactions under a win-win situation.

    He expressed appreciation to the Institute for recognising SON and many of its members of staff as worthy members to further advance the course of ADR.

    Welcoming participants to the conference, ICMC President,  Mr. Emeka Obegolu, enumerated the recent strides of the Institute in lending its resources to national efforts at building a more peaceful and harmonious society.

    He admonished the inductees to make available their acquired skills in mediation to communities in desperate need of knowledgeable and experienced professionals and peace builders.

    The occasion was declared open by Plateau State governor, Simon Lalung, who was also inducted as honorary fellow.

    Governor Lalung acknowledged the great role of ADR professionals in bringing peace to Plateau State and other states of the federation to embrace the mechanisms.

    Other honorary fellowship inductees included, Governor Ibrahim Geidam of Yobe State; Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN); INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu; DG, Nigerian Law School, Mr Olanrewaju Onadeko; Chairman, Delta State Traditional Rulers Council,  Dr. Emmanuel Efeizomor and Capital Oil Chairman, Mr. Ifeanyi Uba.

  • TrustBond wins ITF’s award

    The Industrial Training Fund (ITF) has conferred on TrustBond Mortgage Bank Plc an award of excellence as the Best Contributing Employer in Human Resource Development (HRD) for the year, 2016.

    The ITF is a grade ‘A’ Parastatal, operating under the aegis of the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, which promotes and encourages the acquisition of industrial and commercial skills required for national economic development.

    The emergence of TrustBond as the award winner followed an evaluation exercise conducted by ITF, which considered TrustBond’s policy and track record on Human Resource Development and capacity building of its employees as consistently outstanding.

    Speaking at the awards presentation ceremony at its 2017 Interactive Forum in Lagos, ITF Director-General, Sir Joseph Ari, represented by the Director, Information and Communication Technology, Dickson Onuoha, commended TrustBond for distinguishing itself as a responsible corporate organisation committed to a culture of continuous learning and development of employees.

    Onuoha said TrustBond was given the award for its outstanding efforts in Human Resource Development, particularly in Training and Development for the year, 2016.

    Receiving the award on behalf of the bank, Head of Human Capital and Administration of TrustBond, Lawrence Ogedegbe, described the recognition as an encouragement and a challenge to further improve learning and development of its employees, which ultimately results in higher performance.

    He said the bank would continue to invest in building the skill competencies of its employees through quality training and development programmes.